Commemoration, Celebration, Commiseration? 150th Anniversary of Indentured Labourers in South Africa
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Commemoration, Celebration, Commiseration?
150th Anniversary of Indentured Labourers in South Africa
By
Prof. Brij Maharaj
Geographer in the School of Agricultural, Earth and Environmental Sciences,
University of Kwazulu-Natal,
South Africa
Chaired By
Prof. Ravindra K Jain
Renowned Social Anthropologist
Monday, 7th October, 2013 at 5:00 PM
@ Room No. 13, CSSS/SSS II
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Abstract:
The Indian question in South Africa featured prominently on the national agenda for the greater part of the last century. Politicians from diverse parties were unanimous on one issue - the Indian population in South Africa should be reduced to the minimum possible. The main mechanisms to achieve this were denial of political rights, limited employment opportunities and restrictions on their ownership and occupation of land. Indians managed to survive the economic and political onslaught primarily because of their rich cultural and religious heritage, community survival strategies, and the importance attached to education. Traditionally, South African Indians have been viewed as a homogeneous community, and presented a united front in opposing apartheid.
However, there were various divisions and tensions, related to class, religion, language, geographic origins, and associated changes with the passage of time and isolation from India. The post-apartheid, democratic era has witnessed the resurgence of ethnic and sub-ethnic identities. It would appear that some are trying to re-invent the divisions of 1860. These issues came to the fore as discussions and debates to observe the 150th anniversary of the arrival of indentured labourers in SA. Politics permeated the discussions and the following issues were at the forefront, and will be the focus of this paper: purpose of celebration, who organises, role of SA government, role of Indian government; and finally, is unity possible?
A silent question was whether it was possible to build a democratic, progressive platform from the grassroots level that could articulate the problems and challenges facing the community, without harking back to the ethnic politics and feuding of the tricameral era, or becoming the surrogate of any political party? It would appear that the national strategies to co-ordinate the commemoration the 150th anniversary of the arrival of indentured labourers in South Africa could provide the catalyst to establish such an organisation.
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Professor Brij Maharaj is a geographer who has received widespread recognition for his research on urban politics, segregation, local economic development, migration and diasporas,religion and development, and has published over 120 scholarly papers in renowned journals such as Urban Studies, International Journal of Urban and Regional Studies, Political Geography, Urban Geography, Antipode, Polity and Space, Geoforum and GeoJournal, as well as five co-edited book collections
Time and Place:
Date: Monday, Oct 07, 2013
Venue: CSSS/SSSII, Jawaharlal Nehru University
Address: Room No. 13, CSSS/SSS II
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
City/Twon: New Delhi